AI Article Synopsis

  • Activated monocytes contribute to chronic inflammatory diseases like Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis (JIA), causing damage to joints and highlighting a need for new treatment strategies.
  • The study investigated the histamine analog clobenpropit (CB) as a potential therapy targeting the CXCR4 receptor on monocytes, showing it reduces the production of inflammatory cytokines in both JIA patients and arthritic mice.
  • CB treatment led to significant improvements in mouse models, decreasing inflammation and joint damage, suggesting it could be a promising therapeutic option alongside current treatments for rheumatoid arthritis.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Among immune cells, activated monocytes play a detrimental role in chronic and viral-induced inflammatory pathologies, particularly in Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis (JIA), a childhood rheumatoid arthritis (RA) disease. The uncontrolled activation of monocytes and excessive production of inflammatory factors contribute to the damage of bone-cartilage joints. Despite the moderate beneficial effect of current therapies and clinical trials, there is still a need for alternative strategies targeting monocytes to treat RA.

Methods: To explore such an alternative strategy, we investigated the effects of targeting the CXCR4 receptor using the histamine analog clobenpropit (CB). Monocytes were isolated from the blood and synovial fluids of JIA patients to assess CB's impact on their production of key inflammatory cytokines. Additionally, we administered daily intraperitoneal CB treatment to arthritic mice to evaluate its effects on circulating inflammatory cytokine levels, immune cell infiltrates, joints erosion, and bone resorption, as indicators of disease progression.

Results: Our findings demonstrated that CXCR4 targeting with CB significantly inhibited the spontaneous and induced-production of key inflammatory cytokines by monocytes isolated from JIA patients. Furthermore, CB treatment in a mouse model of collagen-induce arthritis resulted in a significant decrease in circulating inflammatory cytokine levels, immune cell infiltrates, joints erosion, and bone resorption, leading to a reduction in disease progression.

Discussion: In conclusion, targeting CXCR4 with the small amino compound CB shows promise as a therapeutic option for chronic and viral-induced inflammatory diseases, including RA. CB effectively regulated inflammatory cytokine production of monocytes, presenting a potential targeted approach with potential advantages over current therapies. These results warrant further research and clinical trials to explore the full therapeutic potential of targeting CXCR4 with CB-like molecules in the management of various inflammatory diseases.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10562697PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2023.1178172DOI Listing

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